67 So. 794 | Ala. Ct. App. | 1914
Lead Opinion
The appellee, O’Barr, commenced suit by original attachment against one Turner, in aid of which a writ of garnishment was then sued out and served upon the Mitchell Mountain Coal & Iron Company, as garnishee, who filed answer admitting an indebtedness of $2,705.99, but suggesting the appellant, the American Trust & Savings Bank, as claimant. The latter, having been brought in by citation, propounded its claim to the fund, which was predicated upon an assignment to it of the same by the defendant in attachment, Turner. The plaintiff (appellee) contested the claim on the ground that the assignment was fraudulent and void as to him; and, from a judgment in plaintiff’s favor, the claimant appeals, assigning, among other alleged
The evidence, without dispute, disclosed the following facts: The defendant, Turner, became indebted to the plaintiff in April, 1913, in the sum of $76.36, for the recovery of which the suit was brought on June 21, 1913. The fund ($2,705.99) in the hands of the garnished at the time of the service of the garnishment was the balance due under a contract between defendant, Turner and the garnishee, executed on August 19, 1912, whereby Turner, for a stipulated price, payable as the work progressed, was to construct five miles of railroad for the garnishee, furnishing all necessary labor and material. The road had been completed at the time of the service of the garnishment. Shortly after the making of this contract between the defendant Turner and the garnishee, and long before said Turner became indebted to the plaintiff,- he (Turner) on August 26, 1912, for a recited consideration of “one dollar and other valuable and sufficient considerations in hand paid,” transferred and assigned in writing to the American Trust & Savings Bank (the claimant here) all sums then due or that might thereafter become due and payable to him under said contract with garnishee. The garnishee was notified of the assignment and had assented to the same and had made many payments under the contract to the assignee long before the issuance and service of the garnishment writ; This transfer and assignment was absolute in form; but it appears from the evidence, without dispute, that it was in reality given merely as security for an advance of money ($800) then made by said bank to said Turner, and for such future advances as it might thereafter make.him — all of which, at the time of the service of the garnishment, -aggregated something over $12,000. It appears, however, that the
While this excess is fully adequate to more than pay the debt - ($76.36) for which plaintiff brought his suit against defendant Turner, yet it cannot be reached under a writ of garnishment against the garnishee here, unless the said assignment of. said Turner to the claimant bank is fraudulent and void in toto as against the plaintiff, for it is a general rale of law that the plaintiff cannot reach and subject to the payment of his debt by process of garnishment any funds, property, or demands that the defendant debtor could not recover in an action (ex contractu) against the garnishee; the rale being subject, however, to an exception, which is, that the plaintiff can so reach such assets in the hands of the garnishee when they have been fraudulently assigned or conveyed by the defendant debtor to a third person, although, on account of such assignment, the debtor himself could not recover them of the garnishee.—Alexander v. Pollock, 72 Ala. 137; Cunningham v. Baker, 104 Ala. 168, 16 South. 68, 53 Am. St. Rep. 27; 3 Mayf. Dig. 892.
If, therefore, the assignment in the present case is not fraudulent and void in toto as against the plaintiff, then, although the amount assigned is in excess of what is sufficient to fully pay the debt due the assignee (claimant here), the plaintiff’s remedy is to garnishee the assignee and thereby reach the excess sum that will come into its hands, as a result of the assignment, before such excess is paid over to the defendant (Henderson v. Ala. Gold Life Ins. Co., 72 Ala. 32), for, if the assignment is not so entirely fraudulent and void, then
The fund assigned was not, as insisted by plaintiff’s counsel, wages or salary within the contemplation of Gen. Acts 1911, p. 370, declaring void all assignments of wages or salaries to be earned in the future; but was as seen, the contract price for building live miles of railroad and was to become due in the future under an existing contract, as described, and as such had the character of assignability.-Payne v. Mobile, 4 Ala. 333, 37 Am. Dec. 744; Wellborn v. Buck, 114 Ala. 279, 21 South. 786; Harrison v. L. & N. R. R. Co., 120 Ala. 42, 23 South. 790.
Nor was it necessary, as insisted, to the validity as against plaintiff of such assignment that it be recorded, since our registration statutes have no applicability to such an assignment.—Rowland & Co. v. Plummer, 50 Ala. 182.
There is no evidence whatever tending to show or to afford any inference that there was any actual fraud or mala tides in the transaction between defendant and claimant; hence, the only question in the case is as to whether or not there was any constructive or legal fraud that would vitiate the assignment. Section 4287 of the Code declares that: “All deeds of gift, all conveyances, transfers, and assignments, verbal or written,
In the construction of this section our Supreme Court have said incidentally that an assignment absolute in form of a chose in action, when intended merely as se-' curity for a debt, is, without more, void as against the creditors of the assignoT, because (quoting the language of the court) “there is a reservation of a benefit to the transferror, a trust for his use” (Truitt v. Crook, 129 Ala. 379, 30 South. 618) ; but the court did not declare to what extent such an assignment in such a case is void, whether in toto or only to the extent of the benefit reserved to the assignor, hence we are not in conflict with that opinion, but in entire harmony with the terms of the statute, when we hold that, in the absence of actual fraud — which, if it existed, would, of course, taint and vitiate the entire transaction — such an assignment is void only to the extent of the benefit reserved to the assignor, the fund that under the assignment is to be held by the assignee in trust for the use of the assignor, which is the excess over and above the amount necessary to pay the debt secured by the assignment.—Hayes v. Westcott, 91 Ala. 143, 8 South. 337, 11 L. R. A. 488, 24 Am. St. Rep. 875; Bank v. Kennedy, 91 Ala. 470, 8 South. 652; Ruse v. Bromberg, 88 Ala. 619, 7 South. 384; Caldwell v. King, 76 Ala. 149.
This excess may, of course, at any time before it has been paid to the assignor debtor by the assignee in discharge of the trust, be reached by any creditor of the assignor, whether his debt existed at the time of the assignment or was created subsequently thereto, because such excess is and remains the property of the debtor, though held by another under an assignment in trust for the debtor’s use. The law (Code, § 4287) declares
But that statute (Code, § 4287) in and of itself operates, according to its plain terms as we interpret them, no further than upon the trust, declaring, as seen, that: “All deeds of gift, all conveyances, transfers, and assignments * * * made in trust for the use of the person making the same, are void as to [his] creditors, existing and subsequent.”
Therefore, if the conveyance or assignment made by the debtor, has, as here, other functions than to create a trust for the use of the debtor, then, so far as the statute cited is concerned, the conveyance or assignment will be upheld to the extent of its valid functions, and vitiated or destroyed at the instance of the assignor’s creditors only to the extent of the trust thereby created for his use or benefit, unless, of course, the two features are so intimately interwoven, which is not the case here, as not to be separable in their operation and effect; but which is the case where a debtor by a conveyance, absolute in form but intended merely as security for a debt, transfers his entire stock of goods to' a creditor and is permitted to reipain in possession and sell the property in the ordinary course of trade for his own benefit.
Tbe last cited case (O’Neil v. Birmingham Brewing Co.) is one of tbe only three cases cited in tbe case of Truitt v. Crook, supra, in support of tbe general declaration there made that, under section 4287 of tbe Code, an assignment absolute in form of a chose in action, when intended only as security for a debt, was, without more, void. Tbe difference between tbe two cases is too obvious to require further discussion.
Tbe other two cases cited in Truitt v. Crook are those of Bryant v. Hall, 21 Ala. 264, and Sterner v. Scholze, 114 Ala. 88, 21 South. 428. Each Of these cases held— tbe latter only as dicta — -that such an assignment is void in toto; but tbe principle upon which those cases proceeded was not that as declared in section 4287, but was that as declared in that other common-law doctrine which is embodied in another section of tbe Code (section 4293), which provides that: “All conveyances, or assignments in writing, or otherwise, of any estate * * * in real or personal property [which has been held to include choses in action. — Hall v. Ala. Term. Co., 143 Ala. 464, 39 South. 285, 2 L. R. A. (N. S.) 130, 5 Ann. Cas. 363], and every charge upon the same, made with intent to hinder, delay, or defraud creditors, * * * are void.”
Under this section, where the assignor is insolvent or embarrassed at the time of the assignment and the as-
The invalidity of the assignment as an entirety rests, therefore, not upon section 4287 of the Code, nor upon the fact that by the assignment a benefit was reserved to the assignor, but upon section 4293 of the Code, and upon the fact that by the form of the assignment the fact of the reservation of such benefit was concealed— secretly reserved — in refusing it to the claimant. The judgment is therefore reversed.
Reversed and remanded.
Rehearing
Rehearing denied.
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting). — The transfer of the chose in action from Turner, the defendant, to the American Trust & Savings Bank is absolute in form on a recited consideration of “one dollar and other valuable and sufficient consideration in hand paid.” The evidence shows without dispute that the sole purpose of the transfer was to secure an indebtedness due from Turner to the bank, and for which the bank held his obligation, that the effect of the transfer was not to satisfy the indebtedness of Turner, bnt to secure an existing indebtedness and to secure any future advances in money that the bank might make to Turner. This brings the transfer within the very letter of section 4287 of the Code, which provides: “All deeds of gift, all conveyances, transfers, and assignments, verbal or written, of goods, chattels or things in action, made in trust for the use of the person making the same, are void against creditors existing or subsequent, of such person.”—Truitt v. Crook, 129 Ala. 377, 30 South. 618; Sandlin v. Robbins, 62 Ala. 477; Taylor v. Dwyer, 131 Ala. 91, 32 South. 509; Roden & Co. v. Norton & Co., 128 Ala. 129, 29 South. 637; Birmingham Dry Goods Co. v. Roden & Co., 110 Ala. 516, 18 South. 135, 55 Am. St. Rep. 35.
.The transfer is void without reference to any fraudulent intent.-Hill v. Rutledge, 83 Ala. 162, 4 South. 135; Sims v. Gaines, 64 Ala. 392; Bryant v. Young, Hall, et al., 21 Ala. 264. The purpose of the statute is to compel such transfers to express the truth and to avoid secret trusts; and while no doubt a legal transfer can be made which expresses on its face a purpose to operate as a mere security for a debt, and would be valid, yet,
In my opinion, the ruling of the circuit court, which is in accordance with the views above expressed, was correct, and the judgment of that court should have been affirmed.